Oscar winners, horror films and indie favorites will arrive to the streaming service next year.

Next month, Netflix offers up a giant selection of films — modern to classic, animated to live action, Oscar winners and indie favorites — and we’ve picked seven that you should watch as soon as they’re available on the streaming service, either for the first time or as part of a nostalgic binge. Enjoy.

1. “Boogie Nights” (available January 1)

Mark Wahlberg, Julianne Moore and Burt Reynolds star in Paul Thomas Anderson’s 1997 comedy about a young man who gets into the California porn industry in the late 1970’s and ‘80s. The film was nominated for three Oscars: Best Supporting Actor, Best Supporting Actress and Best Screenplay.

2. “Braveheart” (available January 1)

Winner of five Academy Awards, including Best Picture and Director, the Mel Gibson-starring drama follows William Wallace’s revolt against King Edward I of England after his secret bride is executed for assaulting an English soldier who tried to rape her.

3. “E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial” (available January 1)

Relive your childhood with Steven Spielberg’s Oscar-winning sci-fi classic which follows a young boy who befriends a comical and friendly alien, who all he wants to do is “phone home” and return to his family.

Stanley Kubrick’s 1980 classic starring Jack Nicholson has cemented itself into cinema history. The story follows a family that heads to an isolated hotel for the winter where an evil and spiritual presence influences the father into violence. If you haven’t watched it, here’s your chance.

5. “Growing Up Coy” (available January 6)

Directed by Eric Juhola, the documentary tells the story of a family who hires a lawyer to pursue a civil rights case of discrimination when the school bans their transgender 6-year-old from using the girls’ bathroom.

IndieWire’s Eric Kohn called the 2016 film “the first great horror movie of the year” in his A- review. The story follows a mother and daughter who struggle to cope with the terrors of the post-revolution, war-torn Tehran of the 1980s, a mysterious evil begins to haunt their home.

7. “Fatima” (available January 17)

Winner of three César Awards, including Best Film and Actress, “Fatima” tells the story of a single mother emigre from Morocco raising a family and working as a maid. The film is a loose adaptation of “Prayer to the Moon,” a short collection of writings by North African writer Fatima Elayoubi, and captures the hardships of fish-out-of-water life and dealing with the generation gap between parents and their children.